Tuesday, April 19, 2011

De-Tangling "Tangled"

Since I was pretty much catatonic after our yard sale Saturday, the girls and I hit up Redbox and collapsed onto the couch to watch Tangled. It had come recommended by a few people (see Danica's review here.) Have you seen it?

Y'all, I liked it. We all did, in fact. "Mom, I can tell you liked this movie, because I see tears on your face," Eliza commented with typical matter-of-factness, while wiping away her own.

I cry at every movie I ever watch, pretty much. Blame my mother. My daughter will be saying the same thing any year now.

I was a little miffed about the whole blonde-hair-turning-brown-when-the-magic's-gone idea. It just seems so old school -- and not in a charming-antique-shop sort of way. But our swashbuckling hero, Flynn Rider, saved the day by admitting to a preference for brunettes.

Afterward, I asked the girls, "So, Rapunzel and Mother Gothel have this little ritual where they say:
'I love you.'
'I love you more.'
'I love you most.'
...  do you think Mother Gothel really loves her?"

"No," Eliza answered with certainty, "She only loves her hair."

It occurs to me that my girl gets what millions of adults still do not. How many people grow to middle age never knowing that they're loved unconditionally -- and never passing that kind of love along?

For how many people does that pain color their view of who God is?

My daughter has moments of tender affection, and moments of knowing just which buttons [of her sister's, usually] to push. She still speaks a bit more slowly than average, and stutters over some of her words. She has days where she'll pick up a book and fly through the pages, and days where I despair of the reading fever ever taking hold. Most days she looks decently fetching in a color-coordinated outfit. Then there are days of head-to-toe stripes.

I have hopes and dreams for her, as with all my children. Some of them may come true. Some she may toss by the wayside, if only to test me a bit: "Do you love ME -- or just something about me that works for you?"

Here's what I hope she'll always know:
No matter what ...
I see YOU
and
I love YOU.

3 comments:

Anne said...

We loved Tangled, too! (But I understand about the blonde/brunette thing!)

Danica Newton said...

Thanks for the shout out! And I agree with you on the Mother Gothel / Rapunzel dynamic. I didn't get it into my review, but I really liked that villain was evil because she manipulated --- what an object lesson, and a great reference point for when I'm trying to explain that to my daughter! (because you know it'll come, being that mean girls will be mean girls)
Anyways, glad you enjoyed the movie :) Now you see why we just had to buy it!

Moxy Jane said...

Why does the color of hair matter at all? Why does a preference for brunettes trump a preference for blondes, if it's all just judging by appearance? A true prince would have a preference for the inside of the princess, not the outside. Like Shrek;-) But that movie franchise has all kinds of other issues to work out. We have not watched Tangled yet, as I am not overly fond of fairy tales to begin with...but have heard good things about it. And I bawl at sentimental movies, too.